New York—Pace Gallery is pleased to present an exhibition of new paintings by Lee Ufan. The paintings are a continuation of the artist’s renowned Dialogue series, and this exhibition is the first time Lee will exclusively show colour Dialogue paintings in a focused installation. On view at 508–510 West 25th Street from September 14 through October 13, 2018, the exhibition is the artist’s sixth show with Pace Gallery worldwide.
Drawing together fourteen paintings from 2016–2018, the exhibition debuts most of the works on view. While the brushstrokes in earlier works from the Dialogue series are the result of several applications of a monochromatic mineral pigment built up into a substantial single mark, these new works encompass a broad range of saturated hues. Painted in a highly controlled method, with brushstrokes that relate to the artist’s breath, the works take up to a month or more to complete, and focus on the resonance of space, colour, light and tension. In the new paintings, Lee has begun to introduce gestural strokes as well as unaltered expressionistic elements, including dots and specks of paint. The resulting forms invite the audience to participate in a conversation with the internal state of the artist, completing the concept of a dialogue, this series’ namesake.
The unpainted canvas is as vital to the artist’s practice as the painted forms. For Lee, these undisturbed white and creamy white fields are necessary structures to allow the boundaries between the paintings and the space in which they are installed to blur, fostering a conversation from each work to the next, as well as the dialectic expression within the paintings themselves. A harmonious equilibrium and resonance between the visible and the invisible, the made and the unmade, is achieved; as stated by the artist: 'A work of art is a site where places of making and not making, painting and not painting, are linked so that they reverberate with one another.'
The exhibition features paintings that are among the largest Lee has ever made, including a single screen work that will encompass approximately 25 feet in length. Installed by the artist in response to the existing structure of the gallery, the large-scale paintings will foster a compelling and immersive visual environment—one that underscores the physicality of the paintings and their radiation through space, as well as encourages individualised contemplation and personal encounters with the work.
Since his foundational role in Japan’s Mono-ha (“School of Things”) movement in the 1960s, Lee has developed an oeuvre attuned to the interconnectedness of matter and consciousness. Referring to his artworks as 'living structures,' he takes a philosophical approach to creating them, viewing his gestures and raw materials as entities that reveal conditions and states of the world as well as our relationship to it. The exhibition highlights the artist’s continued attention to how gestures, light, and colour inform our perceptions and experiences of space.
On the occasion of the exhibition, Pace will publish a full-colour catalogue, featuring installation images of the show, as well as an interview with the artist by writer and curator Philip Larratt-Smith. Larratt-Smith has written extensively on postwar and contemporary art, and has curated contemporary art exhibitions at museums and galleries around the world. The catalogue is anticipated for release in late 2018.
Press release courtesy Pace Gallery.
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